Winter is here, and with it the cold chills are taking away the luxury of secure jobs and constant employee # growth in a number of projects.

The focus this week in the media has been Consensys and its round of layoffs. (Here's an AMA from one of the people let go).It's always a bit scary how the media can pick a target it never had anything to say about, and then attack it like it. You can almost see the pleasure in the media's eyes of someone not being successful. I can understand it with Theranos, or Stox, but not with companies like Consensys.

Even if it does some things we might not appreciate, the role of Consensys in the ecosystem is undeniable. The boldness of it is stunning as well.

And course-correcting for a while is just absolutely fair. Who are we to say what they should have done during the bull market or how they should have run their firm?

But with this context, it is hard times for many projects like Consensys which have counted on a lot of funding, but whose commercial success is unlikely and in any case far off in the future.

Many are downsizing, some are even closing down dev efforts entirely. That being said, VCs deployed staggering amounts of capital, so I'm sure mostly everyone will be able to land on their feet thanks to some Silicon Valley cash, at least for the next few years (and then hopefully a new bull run can start!).

The team at Consensys responded to the critics with a piece detailing Ethereum by the numbers, in which you they try to spread optimism about the ecosystem.As someone very involved in it, it does seem that the pace of innovation, development and talent inflow is inversely correlated with the price action. The stuff we have now, is just another level from what we had at ETH's ATH.Every day we have something that's more usable, more innovative and more importantly that can be improved upon in an exponentially increasing pace of innovation.

Suffice to say, we're very long Ethereum (we're not that clear on ETH instead).

Muneeb and the team at Blockstack are not impressed with CBC (and Vlad is not particularly impressed with the post).

In a long post they explain why the paper just solves for correctness but doesn't consider liveliness at all.

Vlad says that this aspect is going to be addressed in future work, so there isn't really any constructive criticism in here.

You can read more to think about the shortcomings or potential of this specific ETH 2.0 proposal, but I think what Muneeb and team are doing here is very important, and something I've been proposing for a year and a half when I started proposing people share more public due diligence efforts for token sales.

Obviously some reviews will be more helpful than others, but just engaging in the act is a net positive for everyone.

Doing so for technical whitepapers is even more important, as even less people can wrap their heads around the complicated cryptography and politics.

So thanks to Muneeb and team, and looking forward to seeing more of these.

0x is on an absolute roll, and in this post they share some ideas of cool things that could be built on top of their protocol.

The most interesting thing here is to note how horizontal of a protocol it is, and how versatile.

But really the most obvious thing is that we're just at the beginning of all of this. We now have new technical tools, like the 0x protocol, that enable so many new types of applications, and we can't wait to see some of these built.

Bonding curves continue to be a hotbed for experimentation or economic models. In this post David describes the design of "bonded donations" where early supporters have a financial incentive to evangelize the cause and bring in more donors.

This is interesting as it expands the donor pool beyond the intrinsically motivated supporters to the financially motivated ones, ultimately to the benefit of the cause.

A rather simple but very poignant post by Albert Wenger given current state of crypto prices.

They tl;dr is that while we had similar corrections in the history of crypto, this was by far the one that got most media attention and therefore any new entrant will need to accept "perception risk" (ie many have been burnt in the past) on top of "return risk".

So don't expect institutional investors to start piling in causing a V-shaped recovery, it's more likely to be a long and slow one similar to the post-dotcom one.

If you have a spare 30 minutes for an overview of ZK-Proofs, here's a recording of fellow Italian and Berkeley Prof. Alessandro Chiesa (co-founder of Zcash and now of Starkware) on stage at the Scalar Capital Summit back in October.

(disclaimer: we are investors in Starkware Industries)

Bonus: a ZKP "starter pack" with links to the main learning materials.

💥Newsy stuff

- 51%. Vertcoin was 51% attacked in 4 different occasions. Here's the analysis that shows how it won't be the last coin to suffer from this.

- More crunch times. An ETC development group had to shut down due to the market crash and lack of funding options.

- Token (re)design. Numerai announced an overhaul of their NRM token (including a 50% reduction of supply), following the unveiling of Erasure. It's tempting to see an emerging narrative in this, but Numerai is a rather unique case (a token actually used AND a centralized entity that can implement the changes).

- ICOs. A mere $65M was raised via ICOs in November according to Token Data, two orders of magnitude below the heydays. Suffice it to say that this deserved its whole section in earlier issues of TE.

- Down under. Australia's House of Reps has passed the Anti-Encryption Bill, allowing law enforcement to force Google, Facebook, WhatsApp, Signal etc to help them access encrypted comms. File under "why crypto".

- Interesting comments from the Swedish central bank. Two stand out: “Sweden will probably become cashless in 3-5 years” and “If we don’t do anything we are looking at a future where money will be spontaneously privatized.”

- Ryan Zurrer is out at Polychain. We also learn that a LP is supposedly suing the fund. Fun times for everyone.

- BitcoinMagazine is going back to its roots and will only cover BTC going forward.

We've always been impressed with 0x, but the pace of product shipments is something out of this world. This week they release Instant, a quick and secure crypto purchasing flow powered by the 0x protocol.

As I've tweeted, I think something like this is a key to getting more people to use dapps. Hopefully we can add an instant fiat-to-ETH layer in front as to make it completely seamless.

(Also amazing to see that the GIF demo is for the Balance wallet of our Unplug-alumni Richard!)

The DAI ecosystem is structuring itself more and more every day. Now with the new dashboards for individual CDPs and more data, it's even easier to understand what is going on in this weird corner of the web3, which is showing us the future of DeFi.

The battle of the stablecoins continues, and this week Synthetic launches on mainnet with the ability to mint synthetic USD backeb by its own token.

Differently than MRK/DAI, the collateral is not in a third party currency, but in the utility token itself, which makes it all the more scary.

One really cool thing here tho is the shared collateral liquidity pool, meaning that minters can change one flavor of a synthetic coin into another (sUSD to sEUR) without having to exchange them with someone else.

Fascinating. One can now buy r/ethtrader's top banner with Donuts (the reward units of the sub-reddit) and set up any picture.

The pricing model is inspired by the Harberger Tax:- The current owner sets the price for the banner- They pay a daily tax rate of 1% by burning Donuts- If the owner cannot pay the tax, the price goes to 0- Anyone can buy the banner at its advertised price- The owner cannot refuse to sell it at that price

It's interesting that this is an initiative by the Reddit admins. It feels like the future of internet advertising is somewhere in there.

The second one is by Gnosis and will be grant based, with quarterly batches starting in the new year, focused on encouraging the community to "build modules and integrations for our diverse products, enhance the overall user experience, and develop market mechanisms and governance tools."

The goal is to ultimately enable the community to take part in decision-making of how grants are allocated, mostly likely through a DAO.

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